How to Get a Warrant of Possession When Evicting Rental Tenants

This guide is the last of the three-step process to evicting a tenant. To get to this point, a landlord must have:

served notice and waited for it to expire

applied to court for a possession order and then waited until that has expired

This article explains what happens when the Possession Order expires (i.e. at the end of stage 2, and into the final stage).

You will need to apply to court for a final time to get a Warrant for Possession. This is the final legal step. Once a warrant is made, your property will be added to the end of the queue of properties the court’s bailiffs have been instructed to gain possession of.

Applying to Court for a Warrant for Possession

If your Possession Order was outright

If you have received an outright (i.e. not a suspended) Possession Order, then you apply for the Warrant by completing the N325 form and sending it to the court. Like applying for a Possession Order, you should choose the court closest to the property that handles evictions.

You can find the nearest court here. You’ll need to attach payment of £121.

If your Possession Order was suspended

If you received a suspended Possession Order, and the tenant has broken the conditions of that order, then you will need to use a slightly different form.

You will need form N325A. You’ll need to attach evidence that the tenants have not followed the terms of the suspension of the Order, and a payment of £121.

Once the Warrant is Issued

The court will receive your request for a warrant and let you know when they have issued the warrant. You don’t need to notify the tenant. The court will do this.

The warrant will be valid for 12 months from being issued and the court will send you an eviction date. This is the date that bailiffs have scheduled to regain possession of the property for you.

Tenants Can Still Appeal

At this point, the tenant can still hold up or try to challenge the eviction. What they’re able to do depends on what kind of notice the landlord first served and the particular circumstances of the tenant.

then the court has the power to suspend the warrant for up to 2 weeks only.

If the Possession Order was gained via a discretionary ground for a Section 8 possession notice, then the court has no such limitations on how it can act.

Understanding the Tenant’s Point of View

Previous to the Homelessness Reduction Act (passed 2017, but only enforced from April 2018), tenants often wouldn’t receive housing help from their local authority until a warrant for their eviction has been issued by a court.

This meant that many tenants who can’t pay the rent and need to find social or emergency housing are advised not to move out until a warrant is issued.

In theory, this will no longer be the case, as it has been made clear that, if a tenant is faced with the threat of homelessness, the local council has 56 days to prevent a them from becoming homeless. This 56 days matches the two month’s notice a landlord has to give when issuing an eviction notice.

If you suspect your tenant is threatened with homelessness by your evicting them, we recommend speaking to them and the council about what can be done to help all parties achieve an agreeable outcome.